Tuesday, December 14, 2010
what a colorful world
It's a wonderful world, beauty is everywhere. All you need is just to open up your eyes.
Processing: vignetting
Friday, December 10, 2010
Thursday, December 09, 2010
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Withering leave
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
Monday, December 06, 2010
The Wall
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Aperture vs Lightroom
I'd been using Aperture for 2 years, and I like the image quality processed by it it and the simple but powerful user interface. However, I found it's very slow and I thought it was because of the below standard spec of my Macbook (2GB ram on board), until one of my friend on Facebook suggested Lightroom to me.
I have big hesitation switching to Lightroom, because I have over 70K images stored on an external HDD. I can import all the master images, but I cannot transfer the keywords and alternations I did with Aperture. Nevertheless, the Aperture just hung too much and I decided to import all image with Lightroom first, and see how it goes.
Surprisingly, the Lightroom import the images much faster than Aperture. Trying out LR for a few hours, I found it's much faster than Aperture in ALL operations. The only thing I missed in Aperture 3 is the preset color tuning such as toy camera... but I can save my own sets of processing as user presets, so not a big deal.
I would miss Aperture anymore.
I have big hesitation switching to Lightroom, because I have over 70K images stored on an external HDD. I can import all the master images, but I cannot transfer the keywords and alternations I did with Aperture. Nevertheless, the Aperture just hung too much and I decided to import all image with Lightroom first, and see how it goes.
Surprisingly, the Lightroom import the images much faster than Aperture. Trying out LR for a few hours, I found it's much faster than Aperture in ALL operations. The only thing I missed in Aperture 3 is the preset color tuning such as toy camera... but I can save my own sets of processing as user presets, so not a big deal.
I would miss Aperture anymore.
Monday, November 15, 2010
A corner of Forbidden City, Beijing
Thursday, November 11, 2010
One lonely lamp post
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
A downward arrow
Monday, June 21, 2010
Extreme low light @ 64 memorial night
I participated at the 64 memorial night almost every year, primary for remembering the national grief happened 21 years ago. It was extreme dark there, as candles are the only light sources in most situation. Thanks to the ISO 6400 of the K20D; together with the large aperture of my Limited lens, I can take photos with easy. I used to choose b/w photos in the past. But with the new Aperture 3, I find the 'Toy Camera' effect suits the mood of the event very nicely, so I use it in this set.
In the first photo, I deliberately cornered the Chinese word "64" by massive black color. This is to echo the Chinese Government's intention to fade out the noises of the 64 issue in Mainland, and all reference to 64 is blocked. Good we still have freedom of speech in Hong Kong.
In this second photo, the words say for itself. It'd a very difficult shot because the hands are waving in front of me. I was using around 1/15s and very large aperture in this shot, and I have more than 10 unsuccessful shots with this. Glad that I was using digital!
This shot is a very standard candle shot. I like the perfect bokeh by the fa77.
This last shot is also obvious: withered flowers by the side of "CHINA RIGHTS FORUM", let me think about the victims in China pressing for human rights.
After a re-visit to my own photos, I found that I included a lot of words in my photos. Perhaps the visual alone cannot say that much, so I use words to enhance my message unconsciously.
In the first photo, I deliberately cornered the Chinese word "64" by massive black color. This is to echo the Chinese Government's intention to fade out the noises of the 64 issue in Mainland, and all reference to 64 is blocked. Good we still have freedom of speech in Hong Kong.
In this second photo, the words say for itself. It'd a very difficult shot because the hands are waving in front of me. I was using around 1/15s and very large aperture in this shot, and I have more than 10 unsuccessful shots with this. Glad that I was using digital!
This shot is a very standard candle shot. I like the perfect bokeh by the fa77.
This last shot is also obvious: withered flowers by the side of "CHINA RIGHTS FORUM", let me think about the victims in China pressing for human rights.
After a re-visit to my own photos, I found that I included a lot of words in my photos. Perhaps the visual alone cannot say that much, so I use words to enhance my message unconsciously.
Monday, March 22, 2010
SNAP of the Symmetries
Saturday, March 20, 2010
scaffolding and blue sky
Monday, March 15, 2010
Immortality inside the showcase
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Pentax launched the new medium format DSLR!!
A good news for Pentaxian!
The spec is not bad, but very pricy!! Luckily I don't use Pentax in the medium format, so no temptation for me to 'upgrade'.
The spec is not bad, but very pricy!! Luckily I don't use Pentax in the medium format, so no temptation for me to 'upgrade'.
Saturday, March 06, 2010
reflection of a closed gate
Image organization in Aperture
When I was using Aperture 2, I build a 'Project' for each year, and import the folders on HDD into as 'Album' under the 'Project'. However, Aperture 3 doesn't have the option to import folders as "Album' under the 'Project'... it can only import each folder as a separate 'Project', or select images to import into the 'Project' directly.
I feel a need to really understand the concept of image organization of Aperture. And I find this webpage. Great! Since I am old enough to manage slide when I start photography, now I totally understand it.
I decided to:
1) Build a "Folder" under the root for each year
2) When I import images, each folder of the same date (that's how K20D store the files in the first place) will be an individual "Project", under the year folder.
3) I will rename the "Project" if it is of some special occasion, function or job.
I feel a need to really understand the concept of image organization of Aperture. And I find this webpage. Great! Since I am old enough to manage slide when I start photography, now I totally understand it.
I decided to:
1) Build a "Folder" under the root for each year
2) When I import images, each folder of the same date (that's how K20D store the files in the first place) will be an individual "Project", under the year folder.
3) I will rename the "Project" if it is of some special occasion, function or job.
Friday, March 05, 2010
Subdued human, majestic mascot
Angel's wings?
Interesting light and reflections are everywhere in the cities. We just have to pay attentions to find it out.
This is an old snap with Olympus C4040, a 4MP ISO 400 DC. The pic is noisy; the cam focus slowly, but I have been snapping around with it for almost 4 years. In snap shots, camera is really not that important. The only thing matter is: you just need to shot more.
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
"X" / On Zone Focusing
Another non-finder snap by P&S DC. Since I am doing a lot of non-finder street quick snap, the focusing speed of the DC is very important. I was and still using the Fujifilm F10, and the response time is quite good.
For non finder snaps, the old masters will use zone focusing (or pre-focusing), ie. use relative small aperture eg. f/8, and pre-focus the lens to something like 3 or 4 meters, and most common subject will fall into the depth-of-field...... It sounds complicated, but it's actually very simple and basic photographic skill. This technique is getting lesser attentions, and I guess there are a few reasons behinds:
- Modern cameras have very fast and reliable AF system, so there is no need for zone-focusing (sorry for Pentax, the K20D + DA21 combo sometimes let me down in non-finder shots).
- The depth-of-field idea is actually an approximation: ie. the photo will 'looks' sharp for 'reasonable' viewing distance. Reasonable means you are looking at a 4R photo at around 25cm distance. So if you scale-up your photo 100% on screen, it's not sharp at all. Too bad most people do zoom-up on in computer to closely look at the photos, and zone focusing just don't work for this kind of critical scrutinization.
- MOST IMPORTANT REASON: most modern lenses do not have a depth-of-field scale... so there is no way to use the lenses for zone-focusing.
A new camera 'system' design from Ricoh: smart or dumb?
Ricoh announced the new GXR camera 'system', with a whole new concept of interchangable lens... the camera is actually a I/O interface, and the 'lens module' actually includes lens, focusing mechanics, and image sensor.
IMHO, this is a dumb design and this system is doomed. Immediately after I read the news, I came-up with a lot of problems for this idea:
- Cost: every lens module is another digital camera without the I/O. Don't think that will come cheap
- Choices of lens: Only Ricoh is making the lens module. How many choices do you think Ricoh will offer you?
- Reliability of the mount: The mount is slide-in type, with a lot of electronic connections for the LCD viewfinder, memory cards... etc. When dirt gets into the lens mount of a traditional DSLR, you may get a dust mark in your photos. But if dirt gets in the GXR module mount, you may get a card writing error.
Honestly, I can't see any point with this product. I am very happy with my Pentax and DA Limited lenses.
IMHO, this is a dumb design and this system is doomed. Immediately after I read the news, I came-up with a lot of problems for this idea:
- Cost: every lens module is another digital camera without the I/O. Don't think that will come cheap
- Choices of lens: Only Ricoh is making the lens module. How many choices do you think Ricoh will offer you?
- Reliability of the mount: The mount is slide-in type, with a lot of electronic connections for the LCD viewfinder, memory cards... etc. When dirt gets into the lens mount of a traditional DSLR, you may get a dust mark in your photos. But if dirt gets in the GXR module mount, you may get a card writing error.
Honestly, I can't see any point with this product. I am very happy with my Pentax and DA Limited lenses.
New Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 3.1
Released by Apple last week, support for K7 is included. Recommended for Mac x Pentax users.
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
Silhouette of dead tree
Another tree branches photo against blue sky. With the direct midday sun as the background, I need to carefully avoid flares even with the legendary Pentax SMC, well, that may be impossible with N or C lenses. Of course, you have to remove any filter in-front of your lens.
Strong vignetting is added in post-processing.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
A beggar outside the Bank Centre
The original shot was in color mode, and turned to monochrome and add some vignetting.
With the new retouch brush function in Aperture 3, I tried to brush away the saturation of the background, and just retain the color of the subject (the beggar). The result is interesting, but I don't like it. So I just keep with the basic processing.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Branches
Show Window
I like to snap show windows. I always imagine the mascots inside the show windows have their own cognition, they are just not moving. They don't don't feel sad being confined in the crumble space of the showcase, but mocking the human being outside stupid enough to chase materials and fame that don't last....
In this snap, the mascot seems mocking the high-rised office building, and the people inside. The triangle shape of the mascot is also a strong design element in the frame.
Digitally alter to monochrome with orange filter setting (to further isolate the yellow dresses from the greenish background), and added selinium toning effect.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
What are you looking for? / On Cross Processing
With the new Aperture 3, there is a lot of different 'presets' of common digital effect, Selinium tone is one, and this one is Cross Processing. Aperture will show a quick thumbnail preview of the effect when you mouse-over on different presets, so you will know how the image will look like before clicking on it. It's real fun!
This Cross Process effect (there are two different cross process presets in Aperture 3) resembles the E-to-C effect in the film age. "E" refers to E6, which is the Kodak process for color reversal slide films; and "C" refers to C41, the Kodak process for color negative films. People actually get this idea by accident: some people mistakenly used the C41 to process color reversal slide, and they find the processed slide to be of high contrasted and mis-colored. Some people like the surreal feeling, and intentionally use E-to-C as a creative tool of photography.
It's the old days. Now we have digital processing, and you don't need to know a lot about technical to try different color effect. Many new programs also have this kind of effect build-in, so all you need to do is one mouse click. HOW GOOD IT THAT!!
An off-finder street snap with wide angle, cropped and leveled. "Cross Process1" effect in Aperture.
標籤:
image processing,
Note,
small camera,
SNAP,
street,
Theory
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
"Passed by...." / On Selinium Toner
An old snap with slide (yes, the expensive slide). This shot was shot on ISO100 slide, handheld at approx. 1/4s, scanned with film scanner, and digitally altered to monochrome with Selinium tone.
Speaking of Selinium tone, it is actually more than an artistic style.
In the good old days of black-and-white photography, the photo paper was treated with chemicals. Because of the acidic nature of the 'fixing' process, b/w photos are prone to color fading over time, particular when photos are not washed in running water long enough. For additional stability of the photo-print, an additional step called 'toning' is often used. Most toner will alter the color of the print, e.g. Sepia Toner will add a brown tone to the print. Selinium Toner is the most stable toning chemical, and often used in gallery display.
The Power of Light
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Aperture 3.0
Having a quick trial on the Aperture 3.0, which claimed to have 200 new features.
It took me quite some trouble and time to upgrade my Aperture library: you need to have a lot of free HDD space on your Mac (approx. 1.5x of the file size of library); and the upgrade took overnight.
My initial feeling is:
- Most important news for Pentax user: Aperture finally get the Pentax EXIF right, and correctly display the lenses and meter mode information.
- Aperture 3.0 is faster than previous versions
- As expected, the face function is quite slow
- Finally, Aperture has the 'curve' function
I think the Aperture is a good program, and the 3.0 is getting better. Good for Apple.
It took me quite some trouble and time to upgrade my Aperture library: you need to have a lot of free HDD space on your Mac (approx. 1.5x of the file size of library); and the upgrade took overnight.
My initial feeling is:
- Most important news for Pentax user: Aperture finally get the Pentax EXIF right, and correctly display the lenses and meter mode information.
- Aperture 3.0 is faster than previous versions
- As expected, the face function is quite slow
- Finally, Aperture has the 'curve' function
I think the Aperture is a good program, and the 3.0 is getting better. Good for Apple.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Dawn at somewhere in China
An old snap took years ago.
When I snap, sometimes I will stop and wait for some interesting elements to come-into the frame; and this was one of these shots. Motorcycle is very common in this part of China, and the bike in this shot reflect my impression to this city more accurately.
It's a handheld shot, and I pushed the sensitivity way up to ISO 1600.
And this is Shantau, Guangdong.
Monday, February 15, 2010
The morning market
Friday, February 12, 2010
Buried? Still shines!
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Locked
Branded?
Saturday, February 06, 2010
Blize on street
A red dot
Spontaneousness, it's the word for DA21. Having my camera ready in my hand, I just keep my eyes open, and snap a photo whenever some scene catches my attention.
The contrast between the bright red paint and the grey concrete had my attention. The original shot matched my intention quite nicely, and I just add some vignetting to project a surreal feeling and further isolate this already abstract scene from the real world.
Friday, February 05, 2010
Spring Flowers
According to the Chinese calendar, it was "beginning-of-spring" on Feb 4, so it's officially spring now.
I seldom managed to border with the hassles of serious macro shots, but I still want to snap some of the beautiful nature stuff around. The FA43 gives very nature color rendering (even in over casted sky), and a very nice looking bokeh. I just love this lens!
Disc formatting on Mac OS
I am using Aperture to manage my photo library, and the library was on a FAT32 formatted external HDD connected to my Macbook via USB.
Such setup was slow, and I always have problem to sync the backup vault to the external HDD.
recently, I spent some hours to backup my library HDD and reformatted it with Mac native HFS format. After that, the vault function of Aperture works flawlessly!!
Time for me to embrace HFS.
Such setup was slow, and I always have problem to sync the backup vault to the external HDD.
recently, I spent some hours to backup my library HDD and reformatted it with Mac native HFS format. After that, the vault function of Aperture works flawlessly!!
Time for me to embrace HFS.
Thursday, February 04, 2010
破舊中的淒美
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